"Each" is the name of a person!!!
It could be "cuando" which means "when" in Spanish. It comes from "cada uno", meaning "each or each one" in Spanish. For example: Corrimos 2 millas caduno" (We ran 2 miles each)
Katie is a nickname for Katherine. Katherine could be derived from Greek meaning "each of the two"; or it could be derived from the name of the goddess HECATE; or it could be related to Greek αικια (aikia) "torture"; or it could be from a Coptic name meaning "my consecration of your name". In the early Christian era it became associated with Greek "pure" and the Latin spelling was changed from Katerina to Katharina to reflect this.
Both of them love each other ( Arthur and Norma) but both of them don't understand each other
The words how and cow rhyme with each other. Bow and row rhyme with each other. But how and cow do not rhyme with bow and row.
Do we know each other?
It's actually a take on an old nursery rhyme. Its a play on words and should not be read; Twelve pairs hanging high twelve men riding by each man grabs a pear but leave a dozen hanging there. How is this possible? Its twelve pairs of pears and each rider takes one pear, leaving the other 12 there...a dozen.
The pears were packed in pairs so everyone got a pair each.
Thid depends on the mass of each pear.
maybe, there could be an out of school one like hanging with each other!
No. The answer depends on the context.3 apples for each of 4 children means 3*4 = 12 apples in all. 15 pears divided between 5 children makes 15/5 = 3 pears each.
Just a few weeks after passing his exams, the certificate arrived in the post. Each certificate that the company had was hanging in a frame in reception so that anyone coming in would see them.
you would solve it like this:(P= pear)pppppppppppppppppppppppporpppppppppppppppppppppppporpppppppppppppppppppppppporpppppppppppppppppppppppp
A pear is the same price as three apples. He would buy 9 pears and 9 apples.
If you want to know what 17 pears cost if pears cost 89 cents each and you have the price of the pears (0.89) in column B row 2 and the number of pears (17) in column C row 2, then you could put =B2*C2 in cell D2, and that would tell you the overall cost (in dollars).If you mean something else, we need more detail of what "cost of many fruits" means. The SUM() function may be your friend.
That's a total of 80 cents of course !
The number of pears in 1 kilogram would depend on the size and weight of the individual pears. On average, a medium-sized pear weighs around 150-200 grams. Therefore, in a kilogram (1000 grams), you could expect to find approximately 5-7 medium-sized pears.
Each person has a different job. Each person makes world different.